Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

As the name suggests, 3-statement budgeting involves budgeting for three financial statements; the Profit and Loss (P&L), Balance Sheet and Cash Flow. In Budgets and forecasts, you can actively budget for the P&L and Balance Sheet and from those budgets you derive (infer) your Cash Flow budget.

Image Added

For a specified financial period:

  • The P&L budget shows the expected value of your income and expenses. This is the main budget, for which you create the budget workbook initially.

  • The Balance Sheet budget shows the expected value of your assets, liabilities and equity. You can add this budget as a new tab in

your financial budget workbook to create your Balance Sheet budget and derive your Cash Flow budget. Image Removed
  • the main budget workbook.

  • The Cash Flow budget explains how you get from the start of your cash position to your ending cash position. You get to the end position by earning income (such as cash receipts from customers) and spending that income (such as paying for expenses) throughout the year. To put it simply, the Cash Flow shows where your money is coming from and what you are spending that money on. In Budgets and forecasts, your Cash Flow is entirely inferred; it is calculated automatically based on how the P&L and Balance Sheet move. This budget becomes available when you add the Balance Sheet budget. If you choose to include it, it displays as another tab in the main budget workbook.

Image Added
Expand
titleWatch video

Please note that some elements in the video look different to how they currently look, due to design changes. However, the process is the same.

Create a Balance Sheet budget.mp4

Step

Notes

1
  1. Create or open the financial budget workbook.

  2. Click the Add button at the bottom of the worksheet

, enter a name for the Balance Sheet tab
  1. , select the Balance Sheet tab type

, then 2
  1. and click Add.     

Image Removed
  1. Image Added
  2. Select the Balance Sheet

template
  1. Template. 

    • This

setting
    • template determines the layout of the Balance Sheet budget.

    • The options available depend on the types of Balance Sheet statements your organization has created in the Financial Statements module. If your organization only uses one Balance Sheet template, it will be applied by default.

3

  1. Set the Balance Sheet budget hierarchy

levels, as required:
  • Add levels: Click the blue Add button, then select the dimension you want to add at that level.

  • Reorder the levels: Click and hold the level's Move button (a blue box displays around the row), then drag the level up or down to its new position.

This setting determines how the dimensions are grouped in your Balance Sheet budget.
  1. Levels.

    • By default, the first level is the top-level group (category) for the Balance Sheet statement and you cannot change this.

You can add other dimensions as lower levels. The dimensions that are available in the list depend on how you set up the Profit and Loss budget.You can have less
    • If there are no other levels in the P&L budget setup, you will not be able to add levels here. Where levels are available, you can have fewer levels in your Balance Sheet than are in your

Profit and Loss budget
    • P&L. For example, you might want to do your Balance Sheet and Cash Flow budgets at the company level but include your company and branch

in your Profit and Loss.4
    • in your P&L.

    • To add a level, click Add level, then select the dimension you want to add at that level. The dimensions that are available in the list correspond to the levels in the P&L budget setup.

    • If you add multiple levels, you can reorder those levels to determine how the dimensions are grouped in your Balance Sheet budget. Click and hold the level's Move button (a blue box displays around the row), then drag the level up or down to its new position. 

  1. (Optional) Select the Cash Flow

template
  1. Template. 

    • This

setting
    • template creates a Cash Flow budget on a separate tab in the workbook.

    • The values in the Cash Flow budget are automatically derived from the values in the

Profit
    • P&L and

Loss and
    • Balance Sheet budgets. The budget hierarchy levels are inherited from the Balance Sheet budget but if available, you can add custom levels

which
    • that will help you to group your Cash Flow statement.

5
  1. Select the opening balance

stream
  1. Stream.

  1. This is the stream from which your Balance Sheet values come

from
  1. . In most cases, this is the Balance Sheet stream

.6
  1. but you might have other options to choose from.

  2. (Optional) Change the opening balance start date (previous

period end
  1. Period End date).

    • By default,

the period end
    • this date is selected for you, as it is linked to the start date of your

Profit and Loss
    • P&L budget setup. For example, if your budget period is

November 2022 to October 2023
    • April 2023 to March 2024, the Balance Sheet opening balance date is the month prior to that period,

October 2022
    • March 2023.

    • This date must be on or before your Balance Sheet budget period start date, as it informs the initial opening balance for your Balance Sheet budget and enables changes (movements) to be entered to create a sensible budget opening position. When the Balance Sheet budget starts in a future month, the opening balance helps you to form the bridge between the last closed period and the beginning of the budget period.

    • You can change this date in the future. For example, when you're in the budget period, you can actualize your Balance Sheet by bringing in the actual opening position for that budget period.

7
  1. (Optional) Change the

measure
  1. Measure.

  1. By default, the measure is selected for you, as it is linked to the stream you selected in step 5. The measure is typically the same as the measure used in the

main Profit and Loss
  1. P&L budget.

8
  1. Image Added
  2. Click Next.

9
  1. Map the

Retained Earnings account codes
  1. entities in the selected dimension to the Retained Earnings account(s).

    • This setting determines the General Ledger Retained Earnings account code(s) in the Balance Sheet budget to which the profit from the

Profit and Loss
    • P&L budget is allocated.

Depending on your account structure, you can use the same General Ledger retained earnings account code for several entities or use different codes as required.
    • Retained Earnings represent the equity of the business (what the business is worth).

    • If you have no levels in the budget, such as in the case of a consolidated Balance Sheet budget, you will only have one

retained earnings
    • Retained Earnings account to map.

The Retained Earning Mapping screen contains a grid where you map entities on the left to the Retained Earnings account code on the right
    • Otherwise, you might have multiple accounts to map. Depending on your account structure, you can use the same Retained Earnings account for several entities or use different accounts as required.

    • If you have a lot

of entities, to limit the number
    • of entities

that display in the grid
    • , you can filter the list of entities and/or select the Not mapped option from the All dropdown list on the top right to help you complete the mapping.

Select
    • Image Added

    • To map one entity, click the yellow box on the right and select the account from the list that displays.

    • To map multiple entities to one account, select the checkboxes of

individual
    • those entities or click the Select all button in the top left corner of the grid, then select the

corresponding entity in the main database (in the window
    • account from the list that displays

)
    • .

The Retained Earnings account is suggested for you and displays at the top of the list (marked with a star) but you can select a different account as required.10
    • Image Added

  1. Click Next.

11
  1.                                   

  2. Map

the cash accounts to
  1. the entities in the selected dimension to the Cash account(s).

    • Depending on your account structure, you can use the same General Ledger

bank
    • Bank account code for several entities or use different codes as required. Typically, you use a separate bank account for each entity. If you have no levels, such as in the case of a

consolidate
    • consolidated Balance Sheet budget, you will only have one bank account to map.

The Cash Mapping screen contains a grid where you map
    • Map entities on the left to the Cash account code on the right

. The process is
    • , in the same

as that on the previous Retained Earning Mapping screen. However, this time, it is the
    • way you mapped to the Retained Earnings accounts. The bank and/or cash accounts

that are suggested for you and displays
    • display at the top of the list (marked with a bank icon).

12
    • Image Added
  1. Click Create Balance Sheet. 

  2. Proceed to explore your new

budget worksheet(s). A new tab is added to your budget workbook for the Balance Sheet budget. If you opted to add a Cash Flow budget, an additional tab is added for that budget.